Goddess of Light
I remember
when I first learned that Eastern spirituality regards sex as sacred. It
shocked me. I think it was Carl Jung who first informed me, and then I saw
photos of figures in Eastern temples illustrating the fact. In my childhood
prudery ruled, enforced by relatives who lived close to our home on the farm.
They attended Mass every morning and this clinched a tight relationship between
religion and excessive modesty.
Goddess
religions resembled Eastern religions in their attitude toward sex, as this
guest post shows. Our society’s pornographic treatment of sex desecrates
the body and cheapens sex; it in no way
resembles the respectful celebration of sex in pre-Christian religions.
[Excerpts from Goddess Calling: Inspirational Messages
and Meditations of Sacred Feminine Liberation Thealogy by Rev. Karen Tate]
Welcome friends! If you are familiar with Goddess or earth-based spirituality, you are familiar with the meaning of Winter Solstice and the returning of the light. Our northern European ancestors called the holiday of Winter Solstice, “Mother’s Night,” when female ancestors and Goddess were celebrated and their guidance sought by people.
Welcome friends! If you are familiar with Goddess or earth-based spirituality, you are familiar with the meaning of Winter Solstice and the returning of the light. Our northern European ancestors called the holiday of Winter Solstice, “Mother’s Night,” when female ancestors and Goddess were celebrated and their guidance sought by people.
It
is the time to celebrate Yuletide Goddesses as well as Mithras and Jesus.
The
returning of the light from Winter Solstice forward is not just about whether
we see more darkness or light in the sky. Light symbolizes the potential for
life and new beginnings. Let me share a story with a new perspective on
the season—a myth about the Sun Goddess, Amaterasu, a Shinto Goddess whose
sacred sites are on an island of Japan.
Her story
shares similarities with the Greek Goddess, Demeter, who in her grief over
losing her daughter caused the earth to be barren. In her grief, Amaterasu,
like Demeter, withdrew from the world, causing the land to become barren and
bleak. In sorrow Amaterasu secluded herself in a cave. No amount of coaxing
could get Amaterasu to come out and restore fertility and vegetation to the
land.
Finally
she was coaxed out of hiding and despair by Uzume. Amaterasu peeked out from
the cave out of curiosity, aroused by laughter and clapping inspired by Uzume’s
erotic dance. Uzume’s dance was the catalyst jump-starting Amaterasu to once
again spark new life.
Think
about the last time you really had a belly-laugh. Did you not feel alive and
vital? Seeing the dance brought Amaterasu such joy that life was rekindled.
Vegetation sprang forth once more and humanity could once again eat and sustain
itself. People and creatures would live and not starve.
When
Amaterasu peeked from the cave to look at Uzume dance, she caught sight of her
own image in a bronze mirror. As she became dazzled by her own radiance, light
and fertility were restored to the world. This myth reflects the regenerative
power of the female, inspiring awe across cultures, serving as a catalyst for
creation, change, healing or protection.
The
dance of Uzume was not meant to be lewd. It was meant to be sacred. It was from
a time when procreation and sexual union were still considered sacred, and sex
had not yet become something shameful or taboo. A woman’s body held the
mysteries of life and death. Life springs forth from women’s bodies and women
bleed without dying. This is very powerful “magic” or sacred power. Women, as
life givers, were associated with Goddess herself, the Creator of the world and
everything in it.
We come back to this season of the
returning of the light. There is no life without light. As days
build in length and nights shorten until the Summer Solstice in June, we too
are coming out of darkness, building momentum and energy, gathering light
within ourselves to manifest our desires in the world.
If
we are in sync with the cosmic forces, this is the time for our own awakening
and transformation, our evolution as spiritual beings.
December 12
I tried to publish more comments than the ones appearing below, but somehow technology refused to cooperate. I wish I could remember what the other comments said so that I could reply. Please try sending a comment again if you don't see yours.
Thank you.
I do remember that more than one comment assumed that I'm picking sides and choosing any spiritual frame over others. This is precisely what I want to avoid. I am a Catholic Christian but affirm other ways of envisioning the Invisible Realm.
November 24, 2014, Our Blessings
Guest post by Rev. Karen Tate, Goddess Temple of OC, November 23, 2014.
I know sometimes it doesn’t feel like it, but we are so lucky. We have so many blessings, and none of them have to do with money, though our culture would have us believe it is one of the things that count most. But truly, does having wealth bring us love? No, certainly not.
December 12
I tried to publish more comments than the ones appearing below, but somehow technology refused to cooperate. I wish I could remember what the other comments said so that I could reply. Please try sending a comment again if you don't see yours.
Thank you.
I do remember that more than one comment assumed that I'm picking sides and choosing any spiritual frame over others. This is precisely what I want to avoid. I am a Catholic Christian but affirm other ways of envisioning the Invisible Realm.
November 24, 2014, Our Blessings
Guest post by Rev. Karen Tate, Goddess Temple of OC, November 23, 2014.
I know sometimes it doesn’t feel like it, but we are so lucky. We have so many blessings, and none of them have to do with money, though our culture would have us believe it is one of the things that count most. But truly, does having wealth bring us love? No, certainly not.
Does
having money help us grow as better human beings? Not always. Sometimes I think not having wealth is more
of a blessing. Out of necessity, we have
to learn to connect and interact with each other because we depend on each
other so much more.
So
I’m here today, with Thanksgiving around the corner, to suggest we each peer
into the window of our life as if we were standing before a department store
window. Take stock and I bet you’ll marvel
at all there is inside the “store that is our life” because I think sometimes
there is so much clutter we stop seeing the blessings. And it looks different for each of us, just
as every storefront we walk past in the mall has different and wonderful things
within. Our blessings are diverse.
But
there are blessings we all have in common, too.
We
are so blessed to live in a blue state and not be at risk of vaginal probes,
personhood amendments, and loss of control over our reproductive health. We are so blessed to have this brick and
mortar temple where we can gather to express the oldest religion on the planet—without
fear. We are so lucky to have a brave,
dedicated and talented community, like so many of you here, including Ava and
the women and men who keep this temple thriving.
We
are so lucky to have the Internet and clean water and advanced medicine. It’s easy to forget everyone doesn’t have
that. We are blessed that we aren’t forced to kill
our girl children at birth because we can’t afford their dowry later in
life. We are blessed because we can
vote, although too many of us don’t. We
can disobey male authority without paying a price. But we forget so many of these things. We’re human and we take them for granted
sometimes.
But
as you put your nose on the glass of your own storefront - and I hope you will
- to peruse all the goodness inside, I hope you’ll also be courageous enough to
lift the lid of your challenges, disappointment and pain, because I’ll bet
there are blessings there too. I know
Roy’s heart attack made him start to take his health more seriously. My mother’s death helped me deepen my ability
to forgive. And sometimes it’s the
bullies in life that teach us the most about who we are and what we’re made of.
And
don’t overlook the little blessings that make us smile. See the blessing in the brave little
hummingbird at the bird feeder, the beautiful and perfect roses in the garden,
or the smell of bacon in the morning.
Myself, I cherish that fleeting moment between being asleep and fully
awake, feeling the cool sheets in the dim light of morning. Maybe your cat is sleeping next to you and
you feel the softness of her fur as you hear the alarm go off and there’s
beautiful music on the radio. Don’t
overlook either sweet memories or your feisty friends who challenge your
thinking and help you grow.
I
know I feel blessed and Roy does too, that so many of you drove all this way so
early in the morning to be here today with us.
You too are our blessings and we love you. Thank you for being in our lives.
So
this week and as often as you can, try to take inventory of your blessings like
a good shopkeeper so you know the value of all the assets in the store of your
life. Be sure you look in all the nooks and crannies. We can really find the blessings in the
craziest and most unexpected places as I was reminded recently.
You
see this “scholar” had blown me off because he saw me as a disillusioned
advocate of Gimbutas theories, but we talked, and talked - and to my surprise
he’s offered me a private showing of the valuable artifacts within his goddess
collection. Dare I hold out hope that
crack in the door will swing wide enough for him to fully embrace Gimbutas
herstory? Who knows. We shall see.
So
think about that next week when Uncle George, who parrots Fox News, is talking
crazy round the Thanksgiving dinner table.
As he goes on and on setting your hair on fire next week, making you
choke on the green bean casserole, maybe he’s helping you grow patience and
tolerance. Who knows, you might even
find a kernel of truth in all the crazy that can lead you toward bridging the
gap. We can really find blessings in the
craziest places sometimes!
Comments
Karen, some thoughts for your consideration....
Christianity is an incarnational religion- It says that the Word became flesh. Christianity affirms the physical and the natural in the most powerfully profound way by insisting the Christ was both God and man. Moreover, Catholic theology tells us that Creation is just that- the infinite expression of the Creator's love and creativity at every moment in the present. If the sacredness of nature has been taken, it's not because of Christianity but, actually, in spite of it.